MacK v. State

900 P.2d 1202, 1995 Alas. App. LEXIS 41, 1995 WL 495791
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedAugust 18, 1995
DocketA-5440
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 900 P.2d 1202 (MacK v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacK v. State, 900 P.2d 1202, 1995 Alas. App. LEXIS 41, 1995 WL 495791 (Ala. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

Timothy D. Mack pled no contest to attempted sexual abuse of a minor in the third degree, in violation of AS 11.41.438(a)(1) and *1203 11.31.100(a). The offense is a class A misdemeanor. At his sentencing hearing, Mack requested the court to suspend the imposition of his sentence. District Court Judge Peter J. Ashman denied the request, concluding that a suspended imposition of sentence was legally barred in any case involving an offender convicted of either an attempted or completed act of sexual abuse or assault. Judge Ashman sentenced Mack to a term of 180 days, all suspended. Mack appeals, arguing that the sentencing court erred in concluding that it had no authority to suspend the imposition of Mack’s sentence. We affirm.

Under AS 12.55.085(a), sentencing courts have broad discretion to suspend the imposition of a sentence; the scope of the court’s discretion, however, is limited by the exceptions specified in AS 12.55.085(f). Subsection (f)(1) expressly prohibits courts from suspending the imposition of sentence of a person who “is convicted of a violation of AS 11.41.410-11.41.455.” 1 The crimes covered by this exception comprise article 4, chapter 41, of the Alaska Statutes, the article defining all sexual offenses included within Alaska’s revised criminal code.

Sexual abuse of a minor in the third degree, a violation of AS 11.41.438, is among the provisions in article 4, so a person convicted of the completed crime of third-degree sexual abuse of a minor plainly is not eligible for a suspended imposition of sentence. Mack, however, was not convicted of third-degree sexual abuse of a minor, but of attempted third-degree sexual abuse. The crime of attempted third-degree sexual abuse of a minor implicates not only the substantive statute covering third-degree sexual abuse (AS 11.41.438), but also the criminal code’s general attempt provision (AS 11.31.100(a)). The general attempt statute is not expressly listed in AS 12.55.085(f)(1) as an offense for which a suspended imposition of sentence is barred. Mack reasons that, because he was convicted of attempted, rather than completed, third-degree sexual abuse, a suspended imposition of sentence was permissible in his case.

The narrow issue presented is thus whether a person found guilty of attempting to commit one of the sexual offenses defined in Alaska’s criminal code should be deemed to have been “convicted of a violation of’ that offense, for purposes of applying the statutory prohibition against the granting of a suspended imposition of sentence.

Mack urges us to resolve this issue by adopting the plain meaning of AS 12.55.085(f)(1), the statutory restriction against the granting of a suspended imposition of sentence in sexual offenses. In Mack’s view, subsection (f)(l)’s failure to list the criminal code’s attempt statute among the provisions it covers makes it plain that the restriction against granting a suspended imposition of sentence is not meant to apply to attempts — only to completed sexual offenses.

In our view, however, the meaning of subsection (f)(1) is hardly plain from the face of the statute itself. As defined in AS 11.31.100(a)(1), attempt does not occur in the abstract, but only in connection with a separate, substantive offense; the attempt statute provides that “[a] person is guilty of an attempt to commit a crime if, with intent to commit a crime, the person engages in conduct which constitutes a substantial step toward the commission of that crime.” Hence, attempt cannot be charged alone; a proper charge of attempt must refer not only to the attempt statute but to the underlying sub *1204 stantive offense. 2 Because any properly filed charge of attempt to commit a sexual offense will necessarily allege a violation of both the general attempt provision and one of the substantive offenses defined in AS 11.41.410-11.41.455, it is far from “plain” that AS 12.55.085(f)(1), on its face, excludes attempted sexual offenses. 3 In the present case, for instance, Mack pled no contest to a charge that expressly alleged a violation of both the general attempt statute and the statute proscribing sexual abuse of a minor in the third degree. It is not clear to us why he should not be deemed to have violated both provisions for purposes of AS 12.55.085(f)(1).

The legislative history of the bill enacting paragraph (f)(1) clearly evinces the legislature’s intent to include all forms of sexual offenses within the restriction against the granting of a suspended imposition of sentence. The restriction itself arose from concern over what the legislature perceived to be the repeated and escalating nature of conduct exhibited by many sexual offenders — a pattern of conduct plainly unsuited to the purposes of the suspended imposition of sentence statute. Speaking before the Senate Health, Education and Social Services Committee, the bill’s primary sponsor, then Representative Fran Ulmer, testified that because sexual offenders often begin with the less serious offenses and then graduate to more serious ones, the bill was intended to “cover the entire range of sex offenses.” 4

Little more than common sense is necessary to conclude that “the entire range of sex offenses” includes both attempted and completed acts of sexual assault and abuse. And it would defy both common sense and logic to think that a legislature concerned over the repetitive and escalating nature of sexual offenders’ conduct would think it fitting to bar a suspended imposition of sentence only for a completed offense, and not for an attempt. Finally, construing the disputed statute to exclude attempted sexual offenses would have anomalous consequences, for it would result in an unconditional bar against the granting of a suspended imposition of sentence in even the least serious categories of completed sexual offenses, which constitute class A misdemeanors, 5 while simultaneously allowing the same disposition in more serious attempted sexual assault cases, which are felonies. 6

Mack nevertheless contends that since AS 12.55.085(f)(1) does not expressly cover per *1205 sons convicted of attempted violations of AS 11.41.410-11.41.455, the statute is ambiguous. He cites the general rule that ambiguities in penal statutes are to be strictly construed in favor of the defendant. But

[s]trict construction does not require that statutes be given the narrowest meaning allowed by the language; rather, the language should be given “a reasonable or common sense construction, consonant with the objectives of the legislature.” The intent of the legislature must govern and the policies and purposes of the statute should not be defeated.

Belarde v. Anchorage, 634 P.2d 567, 568 (Alaska App.1981) (citations omitted).

The Alaska Supreme Court considered an issue of statutory construction similar to this one in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
900 P.2d 1202, 1995 Alas. App. LEXIS 41, 1995 WL 495791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mack-v-state-alaskactapp-1995.